Check out my latest article: Techno-Economic Feasibility and Optimum Electric System Configuration Using HOMER Software (Community HRES Project) https://t.co/GmTPCxVEE6 via @LinkedIn
BREAKING: KTN has aired a major investigation alleging Kenyan IDs are being sold to people in Somalia for as little as KSh 15,000. We share some of the revelations.
Look at the images below.
The 2nd image shows Hassan Mohamed Nur's Somali identification documents. According to those records, he was born in Mogadishu on 14 December 1985.
The third image is a copy of a Kenyan ID featured in the KTN investigation. Key details have been blurred.
According to that Kenyan document, the holder was born in Tarbaj on 1 July 1985.
Same person. Different birthplace. Different date of birth.
If this were simply a case of lawful naturalization, why would the date of birth be different?
The investigation further alleges that the individual now holds a Kenyan passport.
And it doesn't end there; residents from Somalia and Ethiopia are being sold IDs. And it's scary. I am sharing more examples shortly. Follow me here- sholla ard
Ngong road is going to be the “face of Nairobi and Kenya in general” during Afcon 2027 for matches held in Talanta Stadium.
Suggestion: All building/land owners need to be “strongly encouraged” to improve the external architectural look of their property. Secondly we need proper non-motorized paths plus footbridges
Went for a mentorship session today at Pangani girls and I would like to say - The future is in good hands.
Totally worth my time.
Nani alisomea huku ?
William Ruto opened a furniture factory in Eldoret last year October.
Suddenly, forests are being cleared for state lodges.
And suddenly, in the 2026/27 budget, Ksh 5.3B has been allocated for Furnitures and General Equipment.
Remember Meru Governor said that the state lodge in Meru will be equipped using furniture made from the wood cleared in the forest.
What he didn't tell you, is whose factory will make and supply the furniture.
William Ruto is a thug who thinks that thuggery is a hustle.
A President who is in business with taxpayers money is a thug!
#RutoMustGoNow
🚨 𝗗𝗜𝗗 𝗬𝗢𝗨 𝗞𝗡𝗢𝗪: Michael Olise has a tattoo in Japanese that says 'kaizen' which translates to 'Each day a little more'.
🗣️ Olise: "It came from a conversation at the training ground at Crystal Palace. One of the coaches was talking about kaizen. Afterward, I looked into it. The idea of improving every day, little by little, until you reach a certain level. I relate to that philosophy."
The choice before Kenyans is simple: continue recycling the same politics that brought us here, or embrace a new path founded on integrity, accountability, constitutionalism and the rule of law in 2027 elections
#Maraga2027
I speak today with a heavy heart and a conscience that will not stay silent.
In Nanyuki, citizens exercising their constitutional right to peaceful assembly have been met with live ammunition.
Three people are now dead. At least fifty have been arrested. A man who had simply closed his shop to avoid the unrest was shot on his way home. He never made it. Journalists covering the demonstrations were attacked.
And most alarmingly, hooded police officers, unidentifiable and therefore unaccountable, were among those who fired into crowds of unarmed Kenyans.
At MMU's Rongai Campus, students who were demonstrating over the suspension of examinations were met not with dialogue but with armed officers, some in plain clothes, who entered the institution, roamed the hostels, and fired live rounds at young men and women on their own campus. Four students were shot.
Victor Kariuki has a bullet lodged near his spine. His mother is at Kenyatta National Hospital praying that surgeons can remove it without destroying his future. These are students. Kenya's students.
I want to be precise about what is happening here, because precision matters in the law, and these are fundamentally legal questions.
Article 37 of the Constitution of Kenya guarantees every person the right to peaceably assemble, to demonstrate, to picket, and to petition. That right is not granted by the government. It is not a privilege extended at the discretion of an OCS or a police inspector. It is a fundamental liberty that inheres in every Kenyan by virtue of being Kenyan. When police officers ban demonstrations, promise restraint and then renege on that promise, deploy hooded operatives who cannot be identified or held to account, and fire live ammunition into crowds of unarmed citizens, they are not enforcing the law. They are violating it.
The National Police Service Act and the National Police Service Standing Orders are not ambiguous on the use of force. Force must be proportionate. It must be a last resort. Lethal force is permitted only where there is an imminent and serious threat to life. A man carrying a placard that says "Reject Ebola" poses no such threat. A student demanding that her examination be rescheduled poses no such threat. No honest reading of our law, no good-faith application of any standing order, justifies what has happened in Nanyuki and on the Rongai Campus this week.
The hooded officers in Nanyuki deserve particular attention. When a state agent covers their face while executing a state function, they sever the chain of accountability that democracy depends on. They act in the name of the Republic while making it impossible for the Republic to answer for their actions. That is not policing. That is something far more sinister. It is the operating logic of impunity, and it must be named as such.
We are days away from the second anniversary of June 25, 2024. The families of those who were killed two years ago when young Kenyans marched on Parliament are still waiting for justice. The Independent Policing Oversight Authority has cases it has not concluded. Officers who fired into crowds have not faced consequences proportionate to the lives they took. And yet here we are again, with fresh deaths, fresh bullets in fresh bodies, and a police spokesperson who told Reuters he had no information about any of it.
I am not willing to accept that this is simply the way things are in Kenya. I refuse that conclusion. Our Constitution was not written to be observed selectively, honoured during elections and forgotten when citizens assemble. It was written as a living covenant, and every arm of the state is bound by it, including, and especially, the security forces.
I call on the Independent Policing Oversight Authority to move with urgency, not months from now, on both the Nanyuki killings and the Multimedia University shootings. I call on the Director of Public Prosecutions to apply their mind and determine whether criminal charges are warranted.
Gen Z realizing one of the biggest shocks after college is that life no longer happens around you.
In school, friends, events, relationships, and opportunities are built into your environment.
As an adult, if you don't actively create a social life, weeks can turn into months surprisingly fast.
as long as you keep showing up, the results won’t have a choice. just keep showing up. day in, day out cause some of the biggest changes in your life will happen slowly before they happen all at once. even when it feels repetitive. even when it feels boring. even when you feel like you’re putting in effort and getting nothing back yet. keep showing up. keep doing the work. keep trusting that every small thing you do is adding up somewhere. life rewards the people who stay consistent long enough for the results to finally catch up.
Chelsea FC can inform supporters wishing to leave physical tributes to our former striker Bobby Tambling that there is the opportunity to do so at Stamford Bridge.
An area is roped off in front of Bobby’s tribute plaque on the Shed Wall at the south end of the stadium site, close to the Megastore. Fans are welcome to lay flowers, scarves, written messages etc. there.
Bobby was one of the most prolific goalscorers in Chelsea history and his 202-goal total was the club’s highest before being surpassed by Frank Lampard.
Rest in peace, Bobby. 💙